Johnny St. Cyr () (April 17, 1890 â June 17, 1966) was an American jazz banjoist and guitarist. He was one of the original pioneers of jazz music, playing banjo and guitar in the bands of Louis Armstrong, King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Johnny Dodds and Kid Ory, among others. He started the idea of banjo with jazz, a combination whose impact changed the banjo world during the Jazz years, and continues to have a marked affect. He is best known for writing the songs "Messin' Around", "Buddy's Habit", "High Fever" and "Oriental Strut", and for playing the banjo and/or guitar on the Louis Armstrong Hot Five and Hot Seven Sessions.
St. Cyr played a Martin guitar, a four-string tenor banjo, or a six-string banjo guitar, making his own instrument by attaching the neck of a guitar to a banjo. The result was a louder banjo with a jazz tone; his sound is notably different from other banjo music recorded in that era. He used a hard, thick pick to produce the smooth rhythm guitar sound and hard, clean single string lines that typified his styleâÂÂhe made his own picks from toothbrush handles.
A hard-working, selfless bandsman, St. Cyr had a professional, simple outlook on musicianship: âÂÂA jazz musician has to be a working class of a man, out in the open all the time, healthy and strong," he commented. "Playing music for him is just relaxing. He gets as much kick out of playing as other folks get out of dancing. The more enthusiastic his audience is, the more spirit the working manâÂÂs got to play.âÂÂ
Johnny St Cyr was born and raised in New Orleans. His parent separated when he was an infant and his father, Jules Firmin St. Cyr, died in 1901, when Johnny was 11. Jules played the flute and guitar, and often played local dances with brass bands. His mother (name unknown) played guitar but she would not let Johnny play it, so he made his own, out of a cigar box, fishing line and various grades of thread. When he could play chords as well as his mother, she gave him her guitar.
Johnny was given formal lessons by friends of his brother, who would come to dinner every Sunday and bring a barrel of Consumers beer. By the time he was 14, St. Cyr was good enough that these friends, Jules Baptiste and Jackie Dowden, asked him to join them in a band. They named it after the beer, calling themselves The Consumers Band. With Baptiste and St Cyr on guitar, and Dowden on mandolin, they played the popular songs of the day. At the time, people hosted fish fries on Saturdays; they hired bands and sold tickets. The best bands attracted the most people and The Consumers Band drew the largest crowds.
In 1905, St. Cyr left school and was apprenticed to a journeyman plasterer (who, in 1907, had a son who would grow up to be the banjoist George Guesnon). By the time his apprenticeship was over, St. Cyr had saved enough money to be able to go to the dance halls, where he studied other musicians and became particularly interested in the Spanish guitar. He also met Martin âÂÂBig Mannyâ Gabriel, an accordionist and cornet player who had started The National band with the clarinetist Wade Whaley. St. Cyr played with them for a few months, until his family moved downtown. There, he started hanging out at the shop of Piron and Paul Dominguez, barbers who were also formally trained violinists. In their shop, they kept a large collection of sheet music, to which they gave St. Cyr access. The barber shop was also the hub for local musiciansâÂÂitâÂÂs where they got their calls to work. St. Cyr got to know Freddie Keppard, cornetist in the hottest band in New Orleans, the Olympia, whose members included Armand J. Piron, Kid Ory, Clarence Williams and Sydney Bechet. Keppard invited St. Cyr to join them, which was quite an honor; to the end of his life, St. Cyr regarded Keppard, Bechet and Louis Armstrong as the "three geniuses of jazz".
As St Cyr noted in his memoir, Jazz, As I Remember It, it was not until c 1915 that the New Orleans bands used the piano; the pianos of the day couldnâÂÂt reach the pitch of the brass instruments. Instead, bands used the violin, the instrument which would also take over when the cornet player needed to save his lip. Also at this time, there were no soloistsâÂÂall songs were played with the full ensemble. And there were no singers. âÂÂThe musicians, when asked to sing, would say, âÂÂNo, we are musiciansâÂÂ,â recalls St. Cyr. âÂÂTheyâÂÂd think it was a disgrace to the profession.âÂÂ
In 1912, as members of the Olympia went on tour, St. Cyr moved to the band of Papa Celestin, with which he did his first tour, through Louisiana, with John RuckerâÂÂs Minstrel Show. When Celestin moved full-time to the Tuxedo Dance Hall, St. Cyr played with the bands of Armand J. Piron (1914), pianist Arthur Campbell (1915) and, in 1916, King OliverâÂÂs Magnolia Band, which consisted of Johnny Dodds, Ernest Kelly, Pops Foster and Henry Zeno. When Oliver landed a full-time job at Pete LalaâÂÂs Café, St. Cyr and Dodds moved to Kid OryâÂÂs band, which also included Mutt Carey and Jimmie Noone.
At the time, there were constant personnel changes among New Orleans bands, as musicians were in several bands simultaneously. There was enormous demand for bands, which played in private homes, at picnics, on horse-drawn carts, in bordellos, at dance halls, and at every conceivable occasion, including grand balls, parades, weddings and funerals. Musicians earned one or two dollars a night, and it was common for clients to pay one person for the evening, and for that person to keep all of the money. So musicians had day jobs, and they were over-worked and under-paid.
It was when King Oliver wanted to take a break from his job at Pete LalaâÂÂs that he told St. Cyr that he needed to find a replacement. St. CyrâÂÂs brother was a friend of Louis ArmstongâÂÂs mother; St. Cyr had heard him play, and was also impressed by how tidy and polite he was. He recommended him, Armstrong learned OliverâÂÂs repertoire in three days and went on to wow the audiences at Pete LalaâÂÂs.
In 1917, Streckfus Steamers hired bandleader Fate Marable to recruit bands for its riverboat excursions. For the 221-foot sternwheeler SS Sidney, Marable recruited Armstrong, St. Cyr, Baby Dodds and Pops Foster, among others. That band played the Sidney until she was damaged in a storm; in 1920, Marable formed a new band for the Capitol, an old sternwheeler that plied the Upper Mississippi in the winter months. This new band included Marable, Armstrong, St. Cyr, Dodds, Boyd Atkins, Norman Brashear, David Jones, Joe Howard, Sam Dutrey, Babe Ridgley and Henry Kimball Hadley. Streckus then arranged for the band to go to St. Louis for the summer season, to play on the steamer St. Paul. Every riverboat has its own band, but the St. Paul band was particularly good. All of its musicians were well-known in New Orleans but, in St. Louis, the band was a sensationâÂÂevery day, the docks were packed with people waiting to hear them play.
As St. Cyr recalled, Streckfus had all of the music publishers send new songs every week. The band had no arranger; the songs were played as they were written, which made the band sound more like a swing band than a New Orleans band. Every week, they had two hours to learn a new set. In St. Louis, they joined the MusicianâÂÂs Union. In their first year, they worked from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., then from 8:00 p.m. until midnight. They were provided with room and board, but everyone preferred to stayed on shore. In their first year, the band members were paid $35.00 a week; in their second, the union made Streckfus hire a separate daytime band and raise each man's pay to $52.50 a week. It was in St. Louis that St. Cyr bought the four-string banjo used on all of the music he would record with Louis Armstrong and His Hot FiveâÂÂthe banjo had been pawned to a pool room owner. St. Cyr bought it for $20.00 and played it for the rest of his life.
Working on the riverboats meant that St. Cyr had given up his day job but, in the fall of 1921, he left the riverboats for good, went back to work as a plasterer, got married and built his own house. He took up the tenor horn and started playing on week-ends at the Pythian Temple Roof Garden. But, in the summer of 1923, King Oliver asked him to come to Chicago; Oliver was about to start recording music and wanted St. Cyr's banjo on the recordings. St. Cyr was reluctant but many of his friends were there and he accepted the offer, although he bought a return ticket.
St. Cyr moved to Chicago in September 1923, initially living with Oliver, then moving in with Louis Armstrong and Lil Hardin. After the recordings with King OliverâÂÂs Jazz Band, for which he was paid $150.00, he moved to Darnell HowardâÂÂs band. Doc CookâÂÂs Dreamland Orchestra was the house band at HarmonâÂÂs Dreamland Ballroom. St. Cyr joined in 1924 and stayed with Cook until 1929. CookâÂÂs clarinetist, Jimmie Noone, had an after-hours job at the black-and-tan Edelweiss Club; CookâÂÂs band finished at 12:30 a.m., after which Noone and St. Cyr would go to the Edelweiss and play with NooneâÂÂs band, which included Joe Poston, Earl Hines and Johnny Wells. In 1926, The Jimmie Noone Orchestra was hired full-time by the Apex Club and the band became Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orchestra.
In his memoir, St. Cyr recalls that Cook was the first bandleader heâÂÂd known who worked with written jazz arrangements, saying âÂÂHe could write music as fast I as could write a letterâÂÂ. He also noted that the New Orleans musicians who were doing well in ChicagoâÂÂmen like Cook, Oliver, Noone and Johnny Dodds, were âÂÂall businessâÂÂ, focused on recording and holding full-time club jobs. Others spent their days at the Musicians Union Hall, where musicians played cards and pool and waited to be called upon by bandleaders or club owners. St. Cyr spent a lot of time there, usually with his best friend, Freddie Keppard. Keppard had a reputation for being difficult to get along with, and his alcoholism had taken hold at this point, but St. Cyr called him âÂÂa brilliant jazz musician, and a real pace-setter, who started reading and interpreting violin music before anyone else in New OrleansâÂÂ. The only difference between Keppard and Armstrong, St. Cyr said, was that âÂÂMusic was Louisâ whole life. For Freddie, it was just the way he earned a living.â There were times when St. Cyr was playing around the clock, often with orchestra pit bands such as Dave PeytonâÂÂs Orchestra, Erskine TateâÂÂs Vendome Orchestra and Charlie ElgarâÂÂs band. He also played in one-night gigging bands, including Willie and Lottie HightowerâÂÂs Nighthawks. When he had time, he would go to Melrose Brothers Music Store, which was the hang-out of musicians who didnâÂÂt like the Union Hall, including Honore Dutrey, Kid Ory, Richard M. Jones and Jelly Roll Morton. St. Cyr had known Morton slightly in New Orleans; here, they re-connected and Jelly Roll went on to hire St. Cyr for several recordings. By the time St. Cyr became Louis ArmstrongâÂÂs banjo player, and he was one of the most well-known musicians in the city.
In the summer months, Doc CookâÂÂs band played amusement parksâÂÂRiverview Park and White City. Cook had just wrapped his 1929 summer season and was preparing to return to the Dreamland Ballroom when the Wall Street Crash occurred. Hundreds of musicians were instantly unemployed, including St. Cyr, who found himself accompanying an Italian singer, playing rural clubs and passing the hat at a dog track. In January 1930, he returned to New Orleans.
St. Cyr worked as a plasterer throughout the 1930s and 1940s, playing music part-time, in the bands of Paul Barbarin and Alphonse Picou. In the late 1940s, the record companies started re-issuing the early jazz classics of Oliver, Morton and Armstrong, among others. This sparked a revival of the popularity of New Orleans jazz, marketed as âÂÂDixielandâ music, and New Orleans musicians started recording again.
St. Cyr came fully out of retirement. In 1949, he recorded with Big Eye Nelson, Albert Burbank, Wooden Joe Nicholas and Herb Morand. With Barbarin, Joe Avery, Thomas Jefferson, Willie Humphrey and Jeanette Kimball, he formed the band Johnny St Cyr and His Hot Five. In 1951, he won the âÂÂAll-Time All-Star Banjoistâ poll conducted by The Record Changer magazine. In 1954, he recorded his first album, under his own name.
In 1955, Disneyland introduced Disney riverboats, paddle steamers which were exact replicas of the old-time Mississippi excursion riverboats. The first to launch, in July 1955, was the Mark Twain. Disneyland offered St. Cyr the job of providing the music for the excursions and, in early 1955, he moved to Los Angeles. He put together a band called the Young Men of New Orleans, which included Kid Ory, Mike DeLay, Polo Barnes, Harvey Brooks, Alton Redd and Barney Bigard. Disneyland also hosted Jazz Nights; for this, St. Cyr formed the New Orleans Creole Jazz Band. He also performed concerts with the New Orleans All Stars and hosted musicians at his home on S. Wall St. for weekly "South Wall Street Barefoot Philharmonic" jam sessions.
St. Cyr would keep the Disneyland job for the rest of his life; in 1961, Louis Armstrong and Monette Moore joined one of the cruises. The short concert, which was captured on film, saw Armstrong and Ory play together for the first time in 40 years. It also launched âÂÂDixieland at DisneylandâÂÂ, an annual event which continued to 1970.
St. Cyr was married to Letice Rosemal from 1921 until her death in 1959. They are known to have had at least one daughter. He died of leukemia, in Los Angeles, in 1966.
In 2002, St. Cyr was inducted into the American Banjo Museum Hall of Fame.